Magazine

Magazine

Magazines, periodicals, glossies or serials are publications that are printed with ink on paper, generally published on a regular schedule and contain a variety of content. They are generally financed by advertising, by a purchase price, by pre-paid magazine subscriptions, or all three. At its root the word magazine refers to a collection or storage location. In the case of written publication it is a collection of written articles.

Other articles related to "magazine":

Young Quaker - Production ... The magazine is printed on recycled paper by The Birches Printers, Willenhall, West Midlands ... The magazine has five editors which are appointed by Young Friends General Meeting, having been discerned by that Meeting's Nominations Committee ... contributions and advertisements with their own thoughts and ideas to form the final magazine, which is usually between 24 and 32 pages ...

Yasuko Aoike ... She made her professional debut in the Ribon magazine 1963 Winter Special Edition with the short story Sayonara Nanette ... appeared in Shueisha's Monthly Seventeen Magazine in the late 1970s (most notably El Alcon and Seven Seas, Seven Skies) and Hakusensha's Lala magazine in the 1980s (Z) ...

Magazine - History ... The Gentleman's Magazine, first published in 1731, in London, is considered to have been the first general-interest magazine ... Edward Cave, who edited The Gentleman's Magazine under the pen name "Sylvanus Urban," was the first to use the term "magazine," on the analogy of a military storehouse of varied materiel ... to periodicals)." The oldest consumer magazine still in print is The Scots Magazine, which was first published in 1739, though multiple changes in ownership and gaps in ...

Famous quotes containing the word magazine:

“A magazine or a newspaper is a shop. Each is an experiment and represents a new focus, a new ratio between commerce and intellect.”—John Jay Chapman (18621933)

“An illustrious individual remarks that Mrs. [Elizabeth Cady] Stanton is the salt, Anna Dickinson the pepper, and Miss [Susan B.] Anthony the vinegar of the Female Suffrage movement. The very elements get the white male into a nice pickle.”—Anonymous, U.S. womens magazine contributor. The Revolution (August 19, 1869)

“Prostitutes have very improperly been styled women of pleasure; they are women of pain, or sorrow, of grief, of bitter and continual repentance, without a hope of obtaining a pardon.”—Anonymous, U.S. womens magazine contributor. Weekly Visitor or Ladies Miscellany, p. 85 (January 1804)